Duy Nguyen <pclo...@gmail.com> writes:

> On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 4:29 PM Christian Couder
> <christian.cou...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, Jun 2, 2019 at 7:38 PM Drew DeVault <s...@cmpwn.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > This flag would behave similarly to git apply --check, or in other words
>> > would exit with a nonzero status if the patch is not applicable without
>> > actually applying the patch otherwise.
>>
>> `git am` uses the same code as `git apply` to apply patches, so there
>> should be no difference between `git am --check` and `git apply
>> --check`.
>
> One difference (that still annoys me) is "git apply" must be run at
> topdir. "git am" can be run anywhere and it will automatically find
> topdir.
>
> "git am" can also consume multiple patches, so it's some extra work if
> we just use "git apply" directly, although I don't think that's a very
> good argument for "am --check".
Another is that "am" has preprocessing phase performed by mailsplit
that deals with MIME garbage, which "apply" will totally choke on
without even attempting to cope with.

I haven't carefully read the "proposal" or any rfc patches yet, but
would/should the command make a commit if the patch cleanly applies?

I wonder if a "--dry-run" option is more useful (i.e. checks and
reports with the exit status *if* the command without "--dry-run"
would cleanly succeed, but never makes a commit or touches the index
or the working tree), given the motivating use case is a Git aware
MUA that helps the user by saying "if you are busy you could perhaps
skip this message as the patch would not apply to your tree anyway".

Reply via email to